In "Flight" could the early trouble with turbulence have led to the crash?

In "Flight" could the early trouble with turbulence have led to the crash? - Illuminated Qoute Board

The pivotal airplane voyage in the movie Flight includes an early interlude in which the airplane encounters some extreme turbulence. To get out of the turbulence, the senior pilot (played by Denzel Washington) makes some maneuvers that -- judging by the reaction of his junior co-pilot -- are risky and unusual, and seem to strain the plane. But the maneuvers appear to work, as the airplane clears the turbulence and begins flying smoothly.

Something like 30 minutes later, after the airplane has been flying normally for awhile, it suffers equipment failure near its tail, causing it to crash.

During the investigation that takes up the rest of the movie, no one seems to mention the early turbulence or those risky and unusual turbulence-avoiding maneuvers as a potential cause of the equipment failure. Was there some reason why the turbulence or the maneuvers wouldn't have played a role in the eventual failure and crash?



Best Answer

I haven't seen the movie, but I am a pilot.

If the severe turbulence is caused by a lightning cell, no aircraft can withstand its severe alternating updrafts and downdrafts which typically break off wings, rudder, tail, and probably bust up the fuselage. Any maneuver which can be done to exit it soon is sensible—especially considering the alternative. This is definitely a situation when the pilot doesn't care if the passengers are comfortable.

More than likely—and if the script is based on aviation science—it wasn't the maneuvers which broke the plane: it was the storm.




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Does turbulence lead to crashes?

No, normal turbulence that aircraft experience will typically not cause an aircraft to \u201ccrash" for two reasons. Most turbulence is well within what aircraft are designed to fly through.

What are the chances of a plane crashing from turbulence?

What Are the Chances of a Plane Crashing From Turbulence? Turbulence will very rarely cause modern airplanes to crash. This is because most turbulence is well within what aircraft are designed to fly through; modern airplanes are designed to withstand 1.5 times any forces on airframes.

Has a plane ever fallen from turbulence?

Turbulence can cause a plane to crash, either as the primary reason for an accident or a contributing factor. According to the FAA, 234 turbulence accidents occurred from 1980 to 2008 resulting in 298 serious injuries and three fatalities.

How does Gladwell explain the primary causes of plane crashes?

He confirms that the typical crash involves exhausted pilots, poor communication, poor decision-making, and misunderstanding. It is not often bad piloting that causes plane crashes: it is the pilots' inability to do all of the other things that flying a plane involves: talking, improvising, multitasking, listening.



When is Turbulence DANGEROUS?!




More answers regarding in "Flight" could the early trouble with turbulence have led to the crash?

Answer 2

Just saw the movie.

Shortly after takeoff from Orlando, the aircraft faces two lines of heavy rainstorms and is inside the first. Whip doesn't do anything particularly unusual except for not climbing for a few seconds when most pilots would be trying to get over the disturbance as soon as possible. He spots a small weak slot in the storm on the plane's weather radar, turns 30° right for it and then resumes climbing. Other than misrepresenting the reason for temporarily leveling out to ATC, he doesn't actually do anything wrong. He does accelerate to the limit of maneuvering speed which bothers the copilot (as does almost everything Whip), but has a reasonable rationale for it. Why he doesn't continue to climb is a mystery, but I thought I caught some dialog suggesting he has deep knowledge about the structure of the formation. Such decisions are the pilot's prerogative.

The maneuvers in heavy weather certainly put more stress on the elevator (the movable horizontal portion of the tail) and could have caused even more stripping seen on the jack screw shown in the NTSB hearing, though that photo was taken more than a year before the accident and the jack screw was way overdue for replacement.

The precise failure was the jack screw jamming in a steep dive pitch position. The photo shows an already seriously deficient part which no sane mechanic would allow. It would not need to be further stressed for it to fail as portrayed. The rest of the damage logically follows: hydraulic failure from the jammed jack screw, inverted flight burning out the engines, etc.

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